Synopsis: Sometimes in life, there’s a little moment of weakness. That one moment of temptation. That moment that you give in – nothing too big, nothing too drastic, just… a little thing. Luke Jeffers has that moment. That moment when he’s sitting at a desk in his internship, bored, and something catches his eye. The Dark Application. From the moment it’s downloaded onto Luke’s phone, Luke’s life starts to change. But is it really everything he wanted?
Right. I was going to kick this review off with the kicking. Because there’s a few things that really have to be said, but I’m going to go for a slightly different tack instead.
The product description (below) lists a number of comparisons with other author’s works – including Lincoln and Child’s Pendergast series (one of my favourites), Michael Crichton, and Robert Ludlum’s Bourne books. That’s a mighty strong comparison, and the book in hand had better deliver to match up to those lofty heights.
In fairness, it is very, very well written. Characters are nicely believable – with both friendships and romances having a pleasant ring of truth and authenticity. Dialogue flows nice and smooth. Action scenes are lively and well-paced. Everything flows very, very well.
So, why do I want to kick it?
Two things, really. One minor, one major.
The (incredibly) minor is the inclusion of a phrase I detest in any story: “Just then…”. Yes, I’m being picky. I have to. There’s nothing else there in terms of the writing. No spelling or grammar mistakes. No formatting problems. No use of wrong words. No moments of shout out-loud stupidity. No lack of continuity. Nothing that drags me from the story. It is very submersive, and for the brief time that I read it, I thoroughly enjoyed it.
That’s the major problem. The brief time.
That this book is 100 pages long wouldn’t be an issue. A short story or novella, standing alone, would be fine at 100 pages. True, this could have been padded out and extended, so I applaud the author’s choice in keeping it to a lean number. But to have this as the first book of a proposed series bothers me.
Don’t get me wrong – I want to read more. In fact, I’m very much looking forward to reading more. The ending in Book One sits perfectly. But, 100 pages per book? I’d feel slightly ripped off, and in honesty would want to wait for a collected volume. However, this is a side-quibble, and has nothing whatsoever to do with the quality of the writing or the story itself (and so would absolutely not factor into the rating of the book).
And the writing is good. In fact, the writing is great. The concept is a neat one, with the potential for both the book and hopefully the series to make for a great TV series and/or graphic novel. I’d thoroughly recommend it, and can’t wait to see the next volume (hopefully with a higher word count).